[NatureNS] "I'm no longer surprised but I'm increasingly angry ....."

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Date: Tue, 29 May 2012 17:49:38 -0300
From: Rick Whitman <dendroica.caerulescens@gmail.com>
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Renowned N.S. oil spill expert given job notice
CBC News Posted: May 28, 2012 9:07 PM AT Last Updated: May 28, 2012 11:12 PM AT

An internationally respected Nova Scotia-based scientist working for
the federal government has been told his job is in danger, CBC News
has learned.

Kenneth Lee — an oil spill expert and the executive director of the
Centre for Offshore Oil, Gas and Energy Research at the Bedford
Institute of Oceanography in Dartmouth — recently received a workforce
adjustment letter informing him that his position is being eliminated.

Lee confirmed he received the notice and his research centre is being
eliminated, but declined an interview with CBC News on Monday.

Others scientists are speaking out.

"I'm no longer surprised but I'm increasingly angry and I'm also
extremely wary of what the future means for Canada," said Jeff
Hutchings, a biology professor at Dalhousie University.

"The government's decisions lately are reducing our governmental
scientific capacity and what that means is that it's reducing or
seriously compromising the ability of science to contribute
effectively to those decisions that affect the well being, the safety
and the health of Canadians and their environment."

According to affected unions, more than 1,000 workers with Fisheries
and Oceans Canada have received notices across the country that their
jobs could be affected by pending cuts.

A spokesman for the department told CBC News in an email on Monday
that only about 400 jobs are actually being eliminated. They declined
to speak about Lee's case.

In 2010, Lee joined experts trying to contain the BP oil spill in the
Gulf of Mexico and provided scientific and technical expertise in the
spill response operations.

"Dr. Lee is a leading expert on the use of chemical dispersants to
clean up oil spills," Fisheries and Oceans Canada wrote on its
website.

"The oil spill response operations in the Gulf of Mexico have provided
new insights for development of international guidelines on the use of
chemical oil dispersants."

Now that Lee's position is disappearing, it's not clear whether he
will continue to be in the federal government's employ.

"It's a huge deal. I think Canadians seriously need to wake up to the
fact that this isn't simply about scientists or researchers losing
their jobs, but it's about the fact that Canada — over the last
half-century — has built up an extremely impressive scientific
capacity to deal with all sorts of different forms of scientific
research," said Hutchings.

"By cutting back and reducing and eliminating those positions, we are
not only affecting those individuals but we are affecting us as a
society and we are seriously affecting our government's ability to
make wise decisions on our behalf."

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